Top 100 Chart placements for Peder Mannerfelt Produktion
Updated 4 months ago
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Coming up next on PM+, Brunnera presents some high-def, joyful techno that doesnt skimp on tasteful complexity. Youd need to have your ears chiseled into a fine point to have clocked Brunneras movements up to this point, skirting as they have around low-key corners of SoundCloud and one choice album carried by NX and Kit, two labels for those that know. When hes not chopping out self-styled whimsical breakcore as Glarc, Gordon Bruce makes brightly pointillist rave futurism that takes its cues from footwork, singeli and electronica. Wild-eyed and devilishly fast, Aulus slaps with more than enough purpose to get a party greased up, charged with the kind of day-go synth strikes we absolutely live for here in PM+ towers. Salad Week finds a crooked beauty in its faux-flute hooks and warm smudges of melodic familiarity, deftly snuck in between its spring-loaded percussion. Theres a discernible groove in the midst of the melee, keeping the lopsided brushstrokes on track to satisfy everyones mutant dancefloor desires in stunningly non-conformist fashion.
Coming up next on PM+, Brunnera presents some high-def, joyful techno that doesnt skimp on tasteful complexity. Youd need to have your ears chiseled into a fine point to have clocked Brunneras movements up to this point, skirting as they have around low-key corners of SoundCloud and one choice album carried by NX and Kit, two labels for those that know. When hes not chopping out self-styled whimsical breakcore as Glarc, Gordon Bruce makes brightly pointillist rave futurism that takes its cues from footwork, singeli and electronica. Wild-eyed and devilishly fast, Aulus slaps with more than enough purpose to get a party greased up, charged with the kind of day-go synth strikes we absolutely live for here in PM+ towers. Salad Week finds a crooked beauty in its faux-flute hooks and warm smudges of melodic familiarity, deftly snuck in between its spring-loaded percussion. Theres a discernible groove in the midst of the melee, keeping the lopsided brushstrokes on track to satisfy everyones mutant dancefloor desires in stunningly non-conformist fashion.
Following his first public outing on the good ship PM+ back in February, Terry Cotta steps back into the ring with another pair of scintillating techno workouts steeped in piercing synthesis and rounded out with radiant charm. Dr. Feelsgood aligns title with mood on multiple levels, applying a surgical precision to the tracks gently evolving, linear arc while administering a strong dose of soul nourishment by way of the subtly joyous, harmonically charged tones. Much more than a banal happy clapper anthem, this chrome-plated love bomb taps into a more spiritual sort of uplift that promises emotional nourishment for everyone in the blast radius of the soundsystem. Neon Skull Implant rides a nagging jack that will get you popping off before theres even a tickle of whats to come. Its a tune running split agendas, getting low down and nasty with the artfully red-lined lead lick up front while pearlescent dub notes shape out the space over yonder with gleaming clarity. Cotta flexes his sound design pecs in the breakdown, busting that troublesome foreground tone out of its main loop in a flourish of mind-melting feedback before locking right back in to get your body over the line. Terry Cotta, hitting and never missing as an ambassador for the freak-flag waving techno you know and love from your friends at PM+.